RE: PH Carpool: Ferrari 550 Barchetta

RE: PH Carpool: Ferrari 550 Barchetta

Monday 25th February 2013

PH Carpool: Ferrari 550 Barchetta

Roofless 550 is ruinous to run, useless when it rains but fabulous nonetheless says this week's Carpooler



Name: Adam Kerrison
Car: Ferrari 550 Pininfarina Barchetta (to give its full name)
Owned since: Jan 2002
Previously owned: Lotus Elise S1, Lotus Esprit Sport 350, Ferrari 550 Maranello, Aston Martin DB7, Bentley Conti GT, Audi RS6 Avant and whole load of "normal" stuff (Ford, Mazda, Mercs, other Audis (A4, A5, Q7), Land Rover Defender)

Adam enjoys the 550 in its element - sunshine
Adam enjoys the 550 in its element - sunshine
Why I bought it:
"I always loved the shape of the 550 and dreamed of owning one from the day it was launched. I did eventually own one, but then the chance to buy the Barchetta arrived. It was brand new, ordered for someone else who then pulled out. Long story short, I got the chance to have it and, perhaps foolishly, bought it. Having the Maranello made its impracticality less of an issue and the chance to hear the V12 "roof down" (or missing in this case) was too much to resist. And just look at: gorgeous!"

What I wish I'd known:
"It was an impulse buy. I hadn't had the Maranello all that long (a year?) so I still wasn't into the costs of running them. Ferraris are seriously expensive to run, let alone buy! Servicing, fuel, tyres, insurance ... ouch. Given that in the early years the Barchetta perhaps did 1,500 miles in a year, it still cost a lot just to sit in the garage.

"I also wished I'd know how crap the Ferrari supplied roof was. I have a Ferrari UK designed tonneau cover which looks good but you can't drive with it on. The Ferrari roof is utterly useless and ugly, requires two people to put it on, and it flies off at 70 mph and crashes into the boot causing damage (I never used the original roof, ever!). So, a "proper" roof is a must. There was the option of an aftermarket hard top but it was also ugly, expensive and couldn't be carried in the car. In the end, I got an aftermarket soft top like an original Elise which works really well (German engineering!). My advice would be never buy a Barchetta without the Michalak roof as you will hardly ever be able to drive it without getting wet.

"Like the 550 Maranello, it has the same mechanical/electrical issues: coolant leaks from the V, failing alarm sirens, the wipers WILL hit the bonnet no matter how much adjustment you give them... You can crack the windscreen by lowering yourself into the car holding onto the top of the screen surround. I did it once, a friend did it the second time (see below on costs)."

Rarity and exclusivity does come with quirks
Rarity and exclusivity does come with quirks
Things I love:
"The look. I really do love the lines and how it flows. The noise. I fitted a Tubi sports exhaust so the V12 rumble is really amplified. It spits on overrun and echoes off buildings & tunnels ... all enjoyed without a roof.

"The way makes you feel. An old cliche but I have driven it to the shop for a pint of milk, never got out a 3rd gear and arrived home with a HUGE smile on my face."

Things I hate:
"Ironically, the lack of a roof! The Barchetta is a compromised vehicle, especially in the UK. When its dry, its brilliant. When it *could* rain you are constantly looking at the clouds and looking for a spot to pull over so you can pull the roof out of the boot. That can spoil the driving experience and driving home sitting in a puddle is no fun - I speak from experience!

"Running costs, especial labour rates at dealers (what a rip off). Tyres, which last about 3000 miles if you're lucky.

"Attitudes of some drivers: petrolheads are great, others will deliberately cut you up. One guy swerved into gravel and pebble dashed the front causing a lot of stone chips (grrr)."

Don't pull on that windscreen on the way out...
Don't pull on that windscreen on the way out...
Costs:
"I bought it new, £178,000 (ouch). Insurance was 'reasonable', about £1,500/year on a limited mileage policy. I am over 40, which helps. Fuel: it's a 110 litre tank and you get a maximum of 300 miles from it (a lot less if you drive it properly). Tyres: £350 each, 3,000 miles from the rears, fronts a bit better. Parts/Servicing: Ferrari money - eye watering expensive.

"I cracked the windscreen twice - the Barchetta screen is unique to the vehicle (ie. it's NOT a Maranello screen). The first time they got one within a week but it cost £2,500 plus VAT plus fitting. The second time I was told there was only one in the whole world (in the USA) according to Ferrari so I had to wait a while for that ... so maybe there are none left? I wouldn't want to wait for a new screen to be made.

"I used the various Ferrari dealers in and around London when I lived there but they are all much the same. I eventually settled on Autofficcina near Chessington, Surrey. Those guys really know their stuff. However, I live in Somerset now so I use the main dealer in Exeter, Carrs - servicing is pretty good there (haggle!)"

Bit blustery at speed, hence camera shake!
Bit blustery at speed, hence camera shake!
Where I've been:
"Brooklands Auto Italia Days - climbed the test hill several times, with my then two-year-old in a rocket seat! Drove from Madrid to Nice via Andorra. Drove into the old city of Carcassonne with it echoing around the streets. Drove from UK to Milan via Germany and Austria, and back via Switzerland and France. Mountain passes, tunnels. Autobahns (see pic!), UK to Barcelona and back via the Bordeaux and the Pyrenees, which are some of the best mountain roads anywhere.

"Toured French Wine Regions - fast D roads! Le Mans 2009 - got to do some laps of the full circuit before the race. There is a video on youtube somewhere (mostly me swearing at the slow Aston in front of me!)

"It's also been on the RAC Supercar run (Tourist Trophy) twice."

What next?
"Selling it, unfortunately. After 11 years I really don't drive it much; it's only done 400 miles in the past two to three years. I can't justify the running costs for something I hardly use, despite how brilliant it is. Its become a solo pleasure (oo-err!) as I have two kids.

"Right now, no plans to replace it with a toy, for the same reasons. I also ride bikes so I still have those for high speed fun (despite crashing my MV last year). I'm one of the strange people who quite likes the look of the FF and the four seats appeal to me - but not until the price is a little closer to earth."

 

Author
Discussion

TTmonkey

Original Poster:

20,911 posts

247 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Sounds like a load of rubbish, virtually unusable in the UK, glad I don't have these issues.


Davey S2

13,092 posts

254 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Does look good with the roof down but with it on it looks like an old playboy with a badly fitting toupe.

The 575 Superamerica is a better long term prospect.


Dinoboy

2,498 posts

217 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Nice write up,always liked these.

M666 EVO

1,124 posts

162 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
TTmonkey said:
Sounds like a load of rubbish, virtually unusable in the UK, glad I don't have these issues.
Agreed, no screens? Crazy.



LaurasOtherHalf

21,429 posts

196 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
stunning & unpractical, what more could you ask for?



(apart from getting more than 3k miles from the rear tyres! or a windscreen that cracks like that eek )

LotusOmega375D

7,601 posts

153 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Looks like you won't have lost much on depreciation, unlike the Coupé.

Good way to get a free advert too! wink

Dan Trent

1,866 posts

168 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
LotusOmega375D said:
Good way to get a free advert too! wink
To be fair to Adam he put himself forward for this some months back and hadn't, at that point, decided he was going to sell.

Cheers,

Dan

fatboy69

9,371 posts

187 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Love it.

Basically its utterly useless unless we have the odd day of sunshine yet, somehow, i get the feeling he doesnt really want to let it go because its such a great car.

Its a Ferrari, it doesnt have a roof that is any good, it costs a fortune to run thanks to high servicing costs, expensive tyres, lack of screens if you break one etc etc.

Its a V12. It looks gorgeous, probably sounds good as well so what is not too like?

Its perfect. A true supercar. Impractical & useless if you have kids. Therefore it is so very very right in every aspect.

Somehow i dont think that he will sell it as he obviously loves the car.

lankybob

1,701 posts

190 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Why does the screen crack? Does the frame bend the glass and smash it? Wouldn't want to roll one!
Nice car, saw one once I think. Bet it sounds amazing with the Tubi!

r1ch

2,871 posts

196 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Stunning looking thing.

lukeschwartz

35 posts

166 months

Monday 25th February 2013
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Great write up, really enjoyed reading it!

Limpet

6,307 posts

161 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
I find it hard to reconcile:

"I bought it new, £178,000 (ouch)"

With

"The Ferrari roof is utterly useless and ugly, requires two people to put it on, and it flies off at 70 mph and crashes into the boot causing damage.....coolant leaks from the V, failing alarm sirens, the wipers WILL hit the bonnet no matter how much adjustment you give them... You can crack the windscreen by lowering yourself into the car holding onto the top of the screen surround"

These are design faults that have no place in a £10,000 car, never mind a £178,000 one.

The Wookie

13,936 posts

228 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
My old man has one in silver with a tubi. It's a beautiful car to drive and look at but, as has been said, the roof is utterly pointless. Small price to pay though.

Also, I'd probably like a bit more rasp from the exhaust, the Tubi adds bass but it could still be louder, especially in such an impractical car that you're unlikely to do more than 100 miles in one go in.

Thankfully neither of us have much inclination to drive it in the wet, and if you're so inclined you'd be surprised at the number of opportunities you get even in an English summer to take it for a spin, although you need to be confident if you're going to have a long jaunt in it!

Will check out that german roof though, would nice to have a more useful backup...

muthaducka

381 posts

184 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Thanks for sharing your story and good on you for getting it. The 550 Maranello is one of my favourites and a classic / future classic but it doesn't suit the Barchetta / roofless conversion in my opinion - gives it some kind of kit car look about. Still I've never seen one in the metal and it must be nice to having something like that from new and so rare.

No hood just turns it into a weekend toy or track plaything for me - bit like a motorbike, something that's focused on thrills just the driver/rider.


sinbaddio

2,369 posts

176 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Awesome 'impulse buy'. Presumably a bachelor back then? wink

AdeV

621 posts

284 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Other than that cocaine-inspired mono-nostril... what a beautiful car. If I'd grown up a banker or a politician, I'd definitely have one; sadly, I grew up a lazy b'stard & therefore can't afford it frown

ZesPak

24,427 posts

196 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Limpet said:
I find it hard to reconcile:

"I bought it new, £178,000 (ouch)"

With

"The Ferrari roof is utterly useless and ugly, requires two people to put it on, and it flies off at 70 mph and crashes into the boot causing damage.....coolant leaks from the V, failing alarm sirens, the wipers WILL hit the bonnet no matter how much adjustment you give them... You can crack the windscreen by lowering yourself into the car holding onto the top of the screen surround"

These are design faults that have no place in a £10,000 car, never mind a £178,000 one.
hehe So true.

As for the 110 litre fuel tank, didn't knew these kinds of cars had such an enormous fuel tank!! But then again, to get any meaningful range I suppose they have to.

Daston

6,074 posts

203 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Limpet said:
I find it hard to reconcile:

"I bought it new, £178,000 (ouch)"

With

"The Ferrari roof is utterly useless and ugly, requires two people to put it on, and it flies off at 70 mph and crashes into the boot causing damage.....coolant leaks from the V, failing alarm sirens, the wipers WILL hit the bonnet no matter how much adjustment you give them... You can crack the windscreen by lowering yourself into the car holding onto the top of the screen surround"

These are design faults that have no place in a £10,000 car, never mind a £178,000 one.
Thats just it, if it was a TVR or a Lotus etc you would never hear the end of it dispite the initial cost being a lot less.

Fantastic looking car but just seems to have some rather large flaws for so much money.

hwajones

775 posts

181 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
A windscreen at £2500!?
Whhatt?

Can't add up the cost/enjoyment/image equation on this one....

Carnnoisseur

531 posts

154 months

Monday 25th February 2013
quotequote all
Great article. Have to say, I've only ever seen these parked up around Casino Square in Monte Carlo and never on UK shores. Having read your summary, I now understand why.